.... On second thought, I like it. I'm in.
I'm sure KU and a few other guys can do a 1 hour weekly segment on fitness and stuff.
I'll head up the nightly spiritual chat. Snowblind, haven't seen him in a while unless he changed his name, can head up the traffic jam hour rant and say angry things. Lots of people like good music here so that's covered. Gamings covered too. Bob can be our morning talk show host. He says a lot of stuff as evident by the almost 20000 posts but then he never gives you much info or details. Perfect for stalling people who are calling in for tickets to a concert and making them listen to commercials.

I will be doing some music selection and do the late night talk shows....lol

Following previous stints as VP at Monsanto, lawyer for Monsanto, and administrator at the USDA, Michael Taylor, is now the chief commissioner of foods at the FDA. As chief commissioner, Taylor will be protecting all of us from dangerous food.

1 set of 30 calf raises (25lbs dumbbells in each hand) wait 35 seconds, 1 set of 40.
1 set of 15 dumbbell curls (25lbs) wait 35 seconds, 1 set to max.

I think it reads like a harder day than it is (or maybe I'm flattering myself? ) Sometimes I feel like I'm not doing enough because I'm not seeing the results I want yet and I've been doing this for quite some time now. I've finally broken the 140lbs barrier (I'm about 5'10" for reference) as I've been trying to eat more. I guess I need to just up my protein, maybe invest in shakes or bars at some point.

1 set of 30 calf raises (25lbs dumbbells in each hand) wait 35 seconds, 1 set of 40.
1 set of 15 dumbbell curls (25lbs) wait 35 seconds, 1 set to max.

I think it reads like a harder day than it is (or maybe I'm flattering myself? ) Sometimes I feel like I'm not doing enough because I'm not seeing the results I want yet and I've been doing this for quite some time now. I've finally broken the 140lbs barrier (I'm about 5'10" for reference) as I've been trying to eat more. I guess I need to just up my protein, maybe invest in shakes or bars at some point.

Any tips?

You could probably streamline that routine a little as some of it is redundant. Everything that follows is just my .02

You're doing three sets of push ups. I would lose one set and just do two sets to max, your choice of what type. You also have bench presses in there, but at 15 lbs it s probably O.K. Keep them if you really like them.

I would ditch crunches entirely and replace them with planks. There are lots of plank variations (I know of 8), they work your entire core, and they are much easier on your back than crunches.

Dumb bell curls. Up the weight and cut the sets. Same suggestion with the calf raises.

Seriously stay away from bars. **** is candy. Eat real food.

If you listen to anything at all I have suggested let it be the part about bars.

Following previous stints as VP at Monsanto, lawyer for Monsanto, and administrator at the USDA, Michael Taylor, is now the chief commissioner of foods at the FDA. As chief commissioner, Taylor will be protecting all of us from dangerous food.

I'm sure he will have the public's best interest in his heart.

I watched "The World According to Monsanto" about a week ago and I can't look at food the same way again. I would definitely recommend it to anyone who's interested in learning about GMO's. Or anyone who cares about what they eat, like you said.

I'm a culinarian of sorts and organic is only as good as the regulation the FDA sets and regulations on organic and free range products are still very very loose and unspecified and even when they are specified, you'd be surprised at how easy it is to pass something off as organic. It's not categorical as logic would have it i.e., non-organic/organic. It's more along the lines of "Oh, this isn't entirely non-organic, so we'll go ahead and call this organic"

I hate the whole organic thing, I like the aspect of eating healthy, but just because they put the word 'organic' in front, doesn't mean you can charge 1/3 more

+1/3 is actually a bargain for most "organic" products
The increased cost in producing organic as opposed to non-organic comes mostly from the adaptation costs of raising or growing "organic" products (and deviating from the traditional and established ways of production which have been refined in terms of efficiency, mass production and most importantly, cost of production). The demand also isn't there to lower the price of "organic" products.

I doubt you have the time and mind for this but if you do, try and find local farms if there are any in your area. Local farms have products that are grown and raised without some of the morbid stuff that store bought products have. It actually costs around the same for way better quality and freshness.

I doubt you have the time and mind for this but if you do, try and find local farms if there are any in your area. Local farms have products that are grown and raised without some of the morbid stuff that store bought products have. It actually costs around the same for way better quality and freshness.

For all the chemicals in food people complain about, they have helped feed more people than ever before.

I watched "The World According to Monsanto" about a week ago and I can't look at food the same way again. I would definitely recommend it to anyone who's interested in learning about GMO's. Or anyone who cares about what they eat, like you said.

I won't sit here and preach that GMO is bad for you. The truth is that I don't know because there has been no long term study to this point. However I feel there is enough evidence for me to not want to eat them.

Quote:

Originally Posted by o 16 Avery NYR o

I hate the whole organic thing, I like the aspect of eating healthy, but just because they put the word 'organic' in front, doesn't mean you can charge 1/3 more

This type of response is part of the reason Americans are where they are health wise.

We want the biggest houses, the newest electronics, the best cars. And people are willing to pay top dollar for all of it. However when it comes to the food we eat people are willing to use the cheapest available options.

$1.99 eggs from chickens raised on crowded feed lots (and pumped full of drugs) are not the same quality as the $4-$5 eggs chickens raised on a pasture produce. If you believe that the $1.99 eggs are better tasting and better for you you must also think that a $10,000 car can match the performance of an $80,000 one.

You get what you pay for. Americans are willing to pay for quality everywhere except when it comes to what they eat.

Quote:

Originally Posted by JCresty

I'm a culinarian of sorts and organic is only as good as the regulation the FDA sets and regulations on organic and free range products are still very very loose and unspecified and even when they are specified, you'd be surprised at how easy it is to pass something off as organic. It's not categorical as logic would have it i.e., non-organic/organic. It's more along the lines of "Oh, this isn't entirely non-organic, so we'll go ahead and call this organic"

I've learned a bunch about these words recently:

Organic like you said is a sketchy one. Tread lightly.

Grass fed (when it comes to eggs) is another one. A company can literally raise chickens indoors, give them access to a 10x10 section of grass for 30 minutes a day, and can call them grass fed or organic.

Pastured. Now that is a money word. Pastured means that the animal was raised outdoors and was fed the things it is naturally meant to eat.

Quote:

Originally Posted by JCresty

I doubt you have the time and mind for this but if you do, try and find local farms if there are any in your area. Local farms have products that are grown and raised without some of the morbid stuff that store bought products have. It actually costs around the same for way better quality and freshness.

Probably not a big surprise, but we do 95% of our shopping at farmers markets. I like the fact that I can look the person who made my food in the eye.